Note: Dried red
pepper flakes are used here as a way of introducing at least one smoky
elements to the dish which could have been just as nice with fresh
chilies. But you can also grill the shrimp, as opposed to poaching them,
just to get a nice smoky char in which case finely-chopped fresh Thai
bird's eye chilies are recommended as a replacement for the dried red
pepper.
Yield: | serves 4 |
Active time: | 30 minutes |
Total time: | 30 minutes |
|
|
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 pounds large or jumbo shrimp (21-25 count), peeled and deveined
- 2 quarts water
- 2 tablespoons salt
- 3 medium-sized on-the-vine tomatoes
- 2 large shallots or 1/2 a large red onion
- 2 large Granny Smith apples
- Dried red pepper flakes, to taste
- Fresh lime juice, to taste
- Fish sauce, to taste
- 1 1/2 cups plain roasted cashews, preferably unsalted
- 1/3 cup mint leaves, torn into small pieces by hand
Procedures
-
Put the water and the salt in a
large pot and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat so that water is steaming
but no longer boiling. If you have a thermometer, make sure the water
registers somewhere between 160˚ and 180˚ F which is ideal for poaching
shrimp.
-
Poach the shrimp, stirring them
around, just until the flesh turns opaque. This should take no more than
one minute; drain, place the shrimp in a large mixing bowl, and set
aside.
Trim the tops off the tomatoes, and cut them into 1/2-inch wedges; add them to the shrimp bowl.
-
Peel the shallots (or red onion) and slice them lengthwise very thinly and add them to the shrimp bowl.
-
Core and halve the apples, and
slice them lengthwise into 1/8-inch slices. Working with 4-5 slices at a
time, arrange the apple slices into neat stacks and cut them into
matchsticks, about 1/8 inch in width. Add the apple matchsticks to the
shrimp bowl.
-
Season to taste with lime juice,
fish sauce, and dried red pepper flakes; toss. The exact amounts of
these ingredients cannot be given, because it all depends on how tart or
sweet the apples and tomatoes are as well as your heat tolerance. The
overall flavor of the salad should be predominantly sour, then salty,
with a tinge of sweetness from the fruits. Start with less lime juice
and fish sauce than you think prudent as you can always add more. (It's
good to have about 1/4 cup of fish sauce and 3-4 limes on hand just so
you know you have enough ingredients to work with even though you may
not need to use all of them. Also, take into consideration whether your
cashews are salted or not. If they are, go easy on the fish sauce.)
-
Add in the cashews and mint
leaves; toss the salad again. Serve immediately as a stand-alone salad
or an entrée with steamed rice.
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